FLC OF A CPR ATX JET STOPPED DSCNT AND CLBED IF RESPONSE TO A TCASII RA.

Date: 1994-07 · Aircraft: BAe 125 Series 800

Anomalies: atc-issue-all-types|conflict-airborne-conflict|other-unspecified

Synopsis

FLC OF A CPR ATX JET STOPPED DSCNT AND CLBED IF RESPONSE TO A TCASII RA.

Narrative

ON JUL/XX/94 DURING DSCNT INTO CMH WE RECEIVED AN RA ON THE TCASII. THE TYPE OF ACFT I WAS FLYING WAS A BAE 800. THE CHAIN OF EVENTS ARE AS FOLLOWS. WE ARRIVED INTO CMH APCH CTL AIRSPACE FROM OVER BREMN INTXN AT 10000 FT. UPON CONTACTING APCH WE WERE CLRED DIRECT TO SUMIE LOCATOR (CM NDB) AND TO DSND TO 6000 FT. DURING THIS DSCNT WE WERE INSTRUCTED TO CONTACT APCH ON 118.2. AFTER COMING UP ON 118.2 THE CTLR WAS VERY BUSY WITH OTHER ACFT; 2 OF WHICH SEEMED TO BE HAVING A SEPARATION CONFLICT. MY FO ATTEMPTED TO CONTACT THE CTLR AT LEAST 2 TIMES BUT WAS UNSUCCESSFUL. AS WE WERE APCHING OUR ASSIGNED ALT OF 6000 FT WE NOTICED RAPIDLY CONVERGING TFC AT OUR ALT ON THE TCASII. AT THIS POINT WE WERE STILL UNABLE TO TALK TO THE APCH CTLR DUE TO FREQ CONGESTION. A TA WAS GIVEN FROM THE TCASII. SHORTLY FOLLOWING THE TA WE WERE ABLE TO PICK THE ACFT UP VISUALLY. A FEW SECONDS AFTER WE SAW THE TFC THE TCASII GAVE US AN RA. DUE TO THE CLOSE PROX OF THE OTHER ACFT THE RA HAD TO BE FOLLOWED. I INITIATED A CLB AND RECEIVED A CLR OF CONFLICT MESSAGE AT APPROX 6800 FT. CONTACT WITH THE CTLR WAS FINALLY MADE AND HE CLRED US BACK TO 6000 FT ON A 270 DEG HDG. WE WERE THEN VECTORED FOR THE APCH. THE OTHER ACFT TURNED OUT TO BE A DC9. HE RECEIVED AN RA AS WELL AND INITIATED A DSCNT. AFTER A PHONE CONVERSATION WITH THE TRACON SUPVR IT WAS DETERMINED THAT THE SIT DEVELOPED DUE TO CTLR PLANNING. THE TRACON SUPVR DID MENTION THAT THE 2 ACFT AHEAD OF US DID IN FACT HAVE A SEPARATION CONFLICT AND THAT THEY BOTH HAD TO ABORT THEIR APCH. IT WAS THIS SIT THAT DIVERTED THE CTLR'S ATTN FROM REALIZING THAT THE DC9 AND MY ACFT WERE ON A COLLISION COURSE AT THE SAME ALT. THE TCASII PERFORMED EXACTLY AS ADVERTISED AND PREVENTED A MIDAIR COLLISION.

Source: NASA Aviation Safety Reporting System (public domain). Reports are voluntary submissions and are not verified by NASA.